In dozens of letters, Dunn lashes out at the media, the State Attorney's Office and wants to tell his side of the story.

"I'm not getting much in the way of sympathy from the press," Dunn wrote in June. "They're a bunch of liberal (expletive) (smiley face)."

In a letter to his grandmother he writes, "The jail is full of blacks and they all act like thugs. This may sound a bit radical but if more people would arm themselves and kill these (expletive) idiots, when they're threatening you, eventually they may take the hint and change their behavior."

Authorities said Dunn parked at a Jacksonville gas station next to the vehicle where Davis was sitting with three other teens. Dunn complained about the loud music, and they started arguing. Dunn told police he thought he saw a gun and fired eight or nine shots into the vehicle.

He also lashes out at the teens in the SUV he apparently shot at.

"I was thinking an easy way to die would be to ask a car load of thugs to turn their stereo down," Dunn wrote.

The letters continue saying, "I'm hoping that my attorney is able to get sworn statements or something from those three boys and catch them in their lies."

Attorneys say that the letters were not meant for family, because he knew they would be read. In fact, a couple of times Dunn wrote in code to confuse anyone who could be reading.

"When I read these letters, I initially see that all he's trying to do is to put his own story out there, knowing that we're going to talk about it as soon as they come up, knowing the state's gonna get a hold of it and establish what he believes is a stand your ground defense and also trying to establish that race is a charging factor in this case," said attorney Gene Nichols.

Dunn fled the scene and was later arrested at his Brevard County home.

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